Summary Of The Things They Carried By Tim O Brien

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Life has no meaning, except for the meaning we create for ourselves. In the memoir, The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien details the 20-year war between Vietnam and America (1955-1975) from the account of a soldier who shared the same name as the memoir’s creator. Tim O’Brien goes into the lives of these soldiers in the Alpha squad, as they venture through the treacherous and dangerous Vietnam. Tim O’Brien goes on to explore the lives of the surviving members of the Alpha squad, after the Vietnam War had ended, showing how characters such as Lieutenant Jimmy Cross, O’Brien, and Norman Bowker were affected by the war. The saddening truth of the loss of a sense of meaning becomes more apparent, as the surviving characters live out their days …show more content…

These jobs did give him something to keep himself busy, but none “lasted more than ten weeks” (O’Brien 149). In the chapter “Notes,” Bowker is characterized as hollow, and his own devil's advocate, due to him making light of his pain, but then later deeming to hate how he is expressing this pain and that he hates people who talk about their problems. This veteran lost his meaning in life, and similarly to human nature, it was almost like he lost a (happier) part of himself. Norman Bowker, a victim of PTSD, struggled with depression and anxiety as a result of his time in the war in Vietnam. This caused him to have a harder time talking to other people and he seemed to relive the traumatic experiences he had in Vietnam. When talking to O’Brien, especially when he was writing a letter to O’Brien, he would say that he hates a certain thing or feature that some people have, but in the end, he was talking about himself. Before he hung himself in a YMCA locker room, his friends and his parents claimed not to notice anything wrong with

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